125 Neb. 445 | Neb. | 1933
This is a liquor case in which the plaintiff in error Enos T. Clarke was convicted in Kearney county. He was found guilty upon the first, second, third, and fifth counts of the information, and not guilty on the fourth.
The errors assigned and discussed in the briefs are in substance as follows: There is not sufficient evidence in the record to sustain the verdict of guilty. There is no competent evidence in the record to prove that the liquors introduced in evidence by the state are intoxicating liquors and contain more than one-half of one per cent, of alcohol. The verdict of the jury on count five of the information is inconsistent with the verdict of the jury on count four of said information. The court erred in overruling the motion of the defendant to quash the indictment for variance between the complaint filed in the county court and the information filed in the district court. The court erred in overruling the motion of the defendant Oldsmobile Coupé, Motor No.' L5800. The complaint filed in the county court of Kearney county was entitled “The State of Nebraska v. Enos T. Clarke.” The information was entitled “The State of Nebraska v. Enos T. Clarke and one Oldsmobile Coupé, Motor No. L5800,” and the motion to quash made by the defendant should have been sustained. The motion to quash on behalf of the Oldsmobile coupé should have been sustained for the reason that the complaint filed in the county court did not make said automobile a party defendant, and no proper warrant describing said automobile was ever issued and placed in the hands of an officer for service, and the automobile was never called upon to plead in the county court.
Most of the facts relating to the persons involved, the places involved, the selling of the liquor, the possession of said liquor, the dates involved, etc., were so clearly established by competent evidence that they aré hardly mentioned in defendant’s brief. Practically only two points are in dispute, the intoxicating quality of the liquor, and the place of the transportation, whether in Kearney county or in Phelps county.
As to the former, the evidence was such as to satisfy
As to the latter, there is serious contention on the part of the defendant that the transportation was not in Kearney county. The plaintiff is equally certain that it was. The buying and selling transaction was in Wilcox in Kearney county and the delivery was on the road between Phelps and Kearney counties about a mile west and a quarter of a mile north. The west side of this road was in Phelps and the east side in Kearney county. The bootleggers, two young women, were the purchasers. The defendant directed them to drive to a place where there was a clump of trees on the east side of the road. They did so, and parked at the point designated. He followed in his own car, the automobile in question, driving up beside them on their left. He took the liquor out of his car and handed it over to them; they saw him in his every movement in so doing. The liquor delivered was that introduced in evidence. As his car was on the west side of the bootleggers’ car the defendant argues that his car may have been on the west side of the road, or in Phelps county, the center of the highway being the county line. This may not be splitting hairs but the point is exceedingly attenuated, to say the least.
However, since the bootleggers’ car was facing north on the east side of the road, we may fairly conclude that
The prosecution was upon five counts, and if the jury convicted the plaintiff on count five and not upon count four, this does not show that they did not conclude aright in finding the defendant guilty on the fifth count. The more natural conclusion is that they did not find aright on count four. Again the counts are separate and the evidence may be different and it is possible that the findings are not in any way inconsistent.
This brings us to the question of whether or not there was a fatal variance between the information charging the car as a defendant and the complaint which was filed in the county court. We think not. The complaint made mention of the car and described it practically as described in the information, though it did not particularize. The variance is not, therefore, sufficient to make a good defense. If there was an error it was not such a prejudicial error as to endanger the rights of a citizen and it will not be permitted to nullify the decision of the Kearney county jury.
The well known section of our Code of Civil Procedure,
No separate action is required to be brought against the automobile in question where there is a personal defendant. It is only necessary to establish that the automobile in question was used by the personal defendant in the transportation of liquor. Comp. St. 1929, sec. 53-137.
We conclude that the district judge was right in his judgment and that the conviction of the defendant by the jury should be affirmed.
Affirmed.